Syllabus 3310 Master-Tdeeo8
Syllabus 3310 Master-Tdeeo8
Syllabus 3310 Master-Tdeeo8
Homepage: http://business.baylor.edu/Don_Cunningham
COURSE MATERIAL
Textbook: Principles of Corporate Finance by Brealey, Myers, and Allen – Concise Edition 1st or 2nd
edition or 9th edition of the extended/non-concise edition. (Syllabus refers to chapters and
problems in 2nd edition)
Overview:
This course develops a fundamental financial framework for strategic financial decision making. Most
important among these strategic financial decisions are the selection and rank-ordering of a firm’s
investment decisions. Firm investments include property, plant, and equipment acquitisions, human
resource changes, executive compensation strategies, market expansion, technological advances, and
any other discovery decisions that impact firm value. We evaluate how firm “projects” should be
selected and which projects should be undertaken first. We then evaluate how debt versus equity
financing impacts financial variables used to select projects and to evaluate firm performance. Several
theories are quite famous; their authors having won the coveted Nobel prize in economics. In each area,
I will make every effort to apply theory to on-the-job or personal finance situations.
Learning Goals :
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop the rationale behind “wealth-maximization” (a.k.a. stock price maximization) as the best
decision criteria for managing the firm. Distinguish between wealth maximization, profit
maximization, return maximization, and cash maximization. Demonstrate the equivalency of wealth
maximization to stock price maximization and how it maximizes the well-being of all shareholders.
Understand the Separation theorem. Demonstrate how its application fulfills a best management
decision strategy.
2. Determine why Net Present Value (NPV) analysis is the best method for rank ordering firm projects.
Be able to demonstrate the potential problems that can occur when other methodologies such as IRR,
Payback, and ARR are substituted for NPV analysis.
3. Determine the best approach that shareholders should use to manage their portfolios of stocks and bonds
versus the approach firms should use to manage their portfolios of property, plant, and equipment.
4. Recognize the essential elements of market efficiency and understand the implications of market
efficiency for developing sound management practices within firms.
5. Derive an appropriate discount rate for use in a firm’s capital budgeting decisions (NPV analysis).
6. Understand the impact of debt versus euity financing of projects/fixed assets (i.e. capital structure
policy) on cost of capital, stock value, and sound management decisions.
7. Understand the tax effects of dividend policy and debt vs. equity financing on the cost of capital and
stock value.
There are three required exams. If you are disappointed with your performance on either the first or
second exam, you may take a “retake” exam. You may only take one retake exam. A “Retake” exam
counts ½ the weight of the required exam. The required exam’s weight is reduced by ½. The first
exam is given after the first 5 weeks of class, the second exam after 10 weeks of class, and the third/final
exam at the end of the semester. To summarize, grading is based on the following:
Required Exam 1 & optional retake 25% with retake exam each counts 12.5%
Required Exam 2 & optional retake 25% with retake exam each counts 12.5%
Final Exam 30% No retake due to end-of-semester time constraints
Participation & Projects 20% (thoughtful & engaging questions = 90 - 100,
responsive to professor’s questions = 85 - 90,
general questions = 80 - 85,
present and attentive = 70 -80)
Text:
Principles of Corporate Finance, Concise edition, 2nd edtion, by Richard Brealey, Stewart Myers, and
Franklin Allen, McGraw Hill.
Recommended Viewing:
You might enjoy the movies Wall Street (I) and Other People’s Money for their fictional depiction of
“marginal investors” and the role they play in corporate finance. Make a list of scenes and quotes with which you
strongly agree, disagree, or question and we can discuss your observations as we refer to these movies and their
depictions throughout the duration of the course.
Class Schedule/Assignments
On my Homepage you will find this syllabus with links to the readings as well as solutions to
chapter problems. Go to http://business.baylor.edu/Don_Cunningham.
In addition to watching the movies Wall Street I and II and Other People’s Money
mentioned above, you can prepare for the first class by reading the Handout entitled Notes
on Intertemporal Choice. We will not cover this material at the paper’s depth, but it will
give you a framework for class discussion.
Differentiate riskless E(R) from risky E(R) Average long-run returns (nominal)
Portfolio
Differentiate “unique” risk from “systematic” risk Average long-run returns (real)
Formulate a measure of Systematic Risk
Hypothesize a price for systematic risk Ch 7: 4, 5, 7, 8, 11, 13, 21
Compose a total E(R) model for any individual Ch 8: 5, 8
security Chapter 7 Problem Solutions
Compare and Contrast E(R) of individual
securities with E(R) of well diversified portfolios Chapter 8 Problem Solutions
Ch 11: Q: 4, 6, 7, 8
PQ: 9, 10, 11, 14, 16
Chapter 11, Solutions
Demonstrate the argument for the existence of a “Debt and Taxes,” (1978) by Merton Miller,
tax subsidy for debt Journal of Finance, Presidential Address to
Re-examine the interest tax subsidy argument in American Finance Association
light of taxes paid by bondholders
Hypothesize a shift in subsidy over time (aka the
bondholder surplus)
Compare muni versus corporate bond
rates at:
Simulate the tax subsidy over time and its impact http://finance.yahoo.com/bonds/composite_
on the value of the firm bond_rates
Infer impact of Merton’s tax argument for
homeowners with mortgages
Handout exercise on Debt and Taxes
In Defense of the Mortgage Interest Deduction
Formulate summary arguments for financing (1992)
When and when not a Tax Break for Borrowing
with debt vs equity
(2014)
Consider additional factors that might affect Taking Aim at the Mortgage Tax Break (2010)
with debt versus equity decision Estimating the Tax Benefits of Debt (2001)
Evaluate Agency Costs
Evaluate Signaling CEO Leverage and Corporate Leverage
Evaluate employee behavioral issues (2012)
Consider financial slack
Ch 14
Marriott's Move to Shed Debt (1992)
The purpose of Corporate finance is to ask Why do Firms exist? And to determine What is the Goal of the firm?
Liquidity
Profitability
Return (rate of return)
Wealth creation—maximum wealth creation
Future Value vs. Present value—Discounting
Which is more valuable: 1100 in one year or 1200 in two years?
Which has highest rate of return, which is more valuable: 1100 in one yr or 1200 in one yr?
Net present value
Stock price
How marginal shareholders versus the averae (majority) shareholders impact the Goal of the firm?
How do Capital markets (i.e. stock and debt markets) differ from retail markets and what if impact on the
Firm achieving its Goal?
Chapter 2
Handout Problem #1
Introduction
Mr. Advisor has advised Ms. Investor to invest 2.6 million into Company ABC. If the company pays no dividends
now, Mr. Advisor projects that the company will be worth 5 million in one year, given its many investment
opportunities. The firm will make a major announcement about its investment plans very soon.
However, Ms Investor likes immediate returns. So, if she agrees to invest, then the company agrees to commence
a dividend policy immediately, paying-out 1 million in dividends immediately. When the company is liquidated in
one year, all remaining assets will be paid out as dividends.
All saving, borrowing, and investing are in the same risk class.
3.75
3
1 1.6 2.6 4
The straight line represents shareholder’s and firm’s opportunities for lending and borrowing , and the curved
line represents a firm’s opportunities for investment. All investments, savings, and borrowing are in the same
riskclass. Suppose a firm is created and raises 2.6 million in cash. Answer the following questions.
1. What is the interest rate in the economy? By what other names might we refer to this interest rate?
2. How much should the company invest in order to make its shareholders happiest?
3. How much will this investment be worth next year?
4. What is the average rate of return on this investment?
5. What is the marginal rate of return on this invesmtne?
6. What is the PV of the firm’s investment? What is another name for this PV?
7. What is the NPV of this investment? What is another name for this NPV?
8. What is the PV of the shareholder’s investment? What is another name of this PV.
9. How much does the shareholder want to consume today and how much tomorrow?
10. How could the firm satisfy the shareholder’s spending preferences in time periods today and next year?
11. If the firm has a no dividend policy, demonstrate how the shareholder’s preferences for spending could still
be satisfied?
12. Suppose the shareholder wanted to spend (consume) $3 million today. Demonstrate how they could
achieve this spending without the firm paying dividends ? How much will they have to spend next year?
Show this on the gaph.
13. Use Shareholder and firm balance sheets to represent the answers to questions 2, thru 11.
Chapter 2 Handout Problem #2
Draw a figure like the one in problem #1 representing the following situation:
1. A firm starts out with $10 million in cash.
2. The rate of interest is 10 percent
3. To maximize NPV the firm invests today $6 million in real assets. This leaves $4 million which can be
paid out to the shareholders.
4. The NPV of the investment is $2 million.
8. We can imagine the financial manager doing several things on behalf of the firm’s stockholders. For
example, the manager might:
a. Make shareholders as wealthy as possible by investing in real assets with positive NPVs.
b. Modify the firm’s investment plan to help shareholders achieve a particular time pattern of
consumption.
c. Choose high- or low-risk assets to match shareholders’ risk preferences.
d. Help balance shareholders’ checkbooks.
But in well-functioning capital markets, shareholders will vote for only one of these goals. Which one?
Why?
11. Why would one expect managers to act in shareholders’ interests? Give some reasons.
Chpater 2
How to Caluculate Present Values
Basic
6. An investment costs $1,548 and pays $138 in perpetuity. If the interest rate is 9%, What is the NPV?
What is the present value of a firm’s investment in $ 1 million U.S. Treasury Bonds yielding 5%, with a
coupon rate also of 5%, and maturing in 30 years. What is the NPV of these bonds? The firms assets earn
15% (ROA), the S&P 500 is expected to earn 12%, and treasury bills yield 3%. (Hint: What is the opportunity
cost of capital? Ignore taxes.) How would your answer change if the economic conditions of 2009 occurred
again?
Norman Gerrymander has just received $1 million bequest. How should he invest it? There are four
alternatives.
a. Investment in one-year US government securities yielding 5%.
b. A loan to Norman’s nephew Gerald, who has for years aspired to open a big Cajun restaurant n
Duluth. Gerald had arranged a one-year bank loan for $900,000 at 10%, but wants a $1 million
loan from Norman at 9%.
c. Investment in the stock market. The expect return in 12%.
d. Investment in real estate, which Norman judges is about as risky as the stock market. The
opportunity a had would cost $1 million and is forecasted to be worth 1.1 million after one year.
Intermediate
14. A factory costs $800,000. You reckon that it will produce an inflow after operating costs of $170,000 a
year for 10 years. If the opportunity cost of capital is 14%, what is the net present value of the factory?
What will the factory be worth at the end of five years?
19. As the winner of the breakfast cereal competition, you can one of the following prizes:
a. $100,000 now.
b. $180,000 at the end of five years.
c. $11,400 a year forever.
d. $19,000 for each of 10 years.
e. $6,500 next year and increasing thereafter by 5% a year forever.
27. You have just read an advertisement stating “ Pay us $100 a year for 10 years and we will pay you $100 a
year thereafter in perpetuity.” If this is a fair deal, what is the rate of interest?
30. Several years ago The Wall Street Journal reported that the winner of the Massachusetts State Lottery prize
has the misfortune to be both bankrupt and in prison for fraud. The prize was $9,420,713 to be paid in 19
equal annual installments.(There were 20 installments, but the winner had already received the first
payment.) The bankrupty court judge ruled that the prize should be sold off to the highest bidder and the
proceeds used to pay off the creditors.
a. If the interest rate was 8%, how much would you have been prepared to bid for the prize?
b. Enhance Reinsurance Company was reported to have offered $4.2 million. Use excel to find the return
that the company was looking for.
31. A mortgage requires you to pay $70,000 at the end of each of next eight years. The interest rate is 8%.
a. What is the present value of these payments?
b. Calculate for each year the loan balance that remains outstanding, the interest payment on the loan, and
the reduction in the loan balance.
c. Under what conditions would the value of the mortgage and the balance outstanding be exactly the
same?
d. If interest rates in the economy increase to 10%, is the mortgage value different for the lender than for
the borrower?
e. Who would be happier, the lender or the borrower? Explain why.
Challenge
36. Here are two useful rules of thumb. The “Rule of 72” says that with discrete compounding the time it takes
for an investment to double in value is roughly 72/interest rate (in percent). The “Rule of 69.3” says that with
continuous compounding the time it takes to double is exactly 69.3/interest rate (in percent).
a. If the annually compounded interest rate is 12%, show that the Rule of 72 is roughly correct.
b. Show that the Rule of 69.3 is exactly correct.
CHAPTER 5
Net Present Value and Other Investment Criteria
Intermediate
a. If the opportunity cost of capital is 10%, which projects have a positive NPV?
b. Calculate the payback period for each project.
c. Which project(s) would a firm using the payback rule accept if the cutoff period were three years?
d. Calculate the discounted payback period for each project.
e. Which project(s) would a firm using the discounted payback rule accept if the cutoff period were three
years?
12. Mr. Cyrus Clops, the president of Gaint Enterprises, has to make a choice between two possible
investments:
Cash Flows ($ thousands)
Project C0 C1 C2 IRR(%)
A -400 250 300 23
B -200 140 179 36
The opportunity cost of capital is 9%. Mr. Clops is tempted to take B, which has higher IRR.
a. Explain to Mr. Clops why this not the correct procedure
b. Show him how to adapt to the IRR rule to choose the best project.
c. Show him that this project also has the higher NPV.
15. Borghia Pharmaceuticals has $1 million allocated to capital expenditures. Which of the following projects
should the company accept to stay within the $1 million budget? How much does the budget limit cost the
company in terms of its market value? The opportunity cost of capital for each project is 11%?
Basic
4. True or False?
a. Investors prefer diversified companies because they are less risky.
b. If stocks were perfectly positively correlated, diversification would not reduce
risk.
c. Diversification over a large number of assets completely eliminates risk.
d. Diversification works only when assets are uncorrelated.
e. A stock with a high standard deviation may contribute less to portfolio risk than a stock with a
lower standard deviation.
f. A stock with a high standard deviation may have an expected return that is less than than a stock with a
lower standard deviation.
g. The contribution of a stock to the risk of a well-diversified portfolio depends on its market risk.
h. A well-diversified portfolio with a beta of 2.0 is twice as risky as the market portfolio.
i. An undiversified portfolio with a beta of 2.0 is less than twice as risky as the market portfolio.
5. In which of the following situations would you get the largest reduction in risk by spreading your
investment across two stocks?
a. The two shares are perfectly correlated.
b. There is no correlation.
c. There is modest negative correlation.
d. There is perfect negative correlation.
8. A portfolio contains equal investments in 10 stocks. Five have a beta of 1.2; the remainder have a beta of
1.4. What is the portfolio beta?
a. 1.3.
b. Greater than 1.3 because the portfolio is not completely diversified.
c. Less than 1.3 because diversification reduces beta.
Intermediate
Challenge
21. Here are some historical data on the risk characteristics of Dell and McDonald’s:
Dell McDonald’s
β (beta) 1.41 .77
Yearly standard deviation of return (%) 30.9 17.2
Assume the standard deviation of the return on the market was 15%.
a. The correlation coefficient of Dell’s return versus McDonald’s is .31. What is the standard
deviation of a portfolio invested half in Dell and half in McDonald’s?
b. What is the standard deviation of a portfolio invested one-third in Dell, one-third in McDonald’s,
and one-third in risk-free Treasury bills?
c. What is the standard deviation if the portfolio is split evenly between Dell and McDonald’s and is
financed at 50% margin, i.e., the investor puts up only 50% of the total amount and borrows the
balance from the broker?
d. What is the approximate standard deviation of a portfolio composed of 100 stocks with betas of
1.41 like Dell? How about 100 stocks like Home Depot? Hint: Part (d) should not require anything
but the simplest arithmetic to answer.
CHAPTER 8
Portfolio Theory and Capital Asset Pricing Model
Basic
8. True or False?
a. The CAPM implies that if you could find an investment with a negative beta, its expected return would
be less than the interest rate.
b. The expected return on an investment with a beta of 2.0 is twice as high as the expected return on the
market.
c. If a stock lies below the security market line, it is undervalued.
Intermediate
15. The Treasury bill rate is 4%, and the expected return on the market portfolio is 12%. Using the capital asset
pricing model:
a. Draw a graph similar to the figure 8.6 showing how the expected return varies with beta.
b. What is the risk premium on the market?
c. What is the required return on an investment with a beta 1.5?
d. If an investment with a beta of .8 offers an expected return of 9.8%, does it have a positive NPV?
e. If the market expects a return of 11.2% from stock X, what is its beta?
Problems encountered when estimating a firm’s Cost of Capital
Accounting data – Intuition might suggest that a company’s audited financial statements provides the logical
source for its cost of capital. This intuition is reinforced by the fact that popular sources of financial information
such as Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s include calculations of ROE, ROA, EPS, debt ratio, dividend yield, as
well as historical balance sheet and income statement information in their company stock reports. Three major
problems are created with this information: 1) returns are based on historical cost rather than market value, 2)
returns are short-term rather than long-term, and 3) the debt ratio and equity ratio, used as weighting proportions in
WACC calculations, are understated or overstated because their values are historical-cost-based rather than
current-market-value based.
Leverage –When a firm finances with debt (is levered), the firm’s stockholders require an ROE that is greater than
the firm’s cost of capital and its bondholders require an ROD that is less than the firm’s cost of capital. Therefore,
neither ROE nor ROD alone is representative of the firm’s cost of capital. However, the firm’s cost of capital can
be calculated by taking a weighted average of ROD and ROE-- the so-called WACC. Its calculation effectively
“undoes” the leverage of the firm. The WACC equals the firm’s cost of capital for its assets as if they were 100%
equity financed.
Diversification – Diversification causes the firm’s overall ROA to reflect a mixture of risk-classes. Therefore a
prospective project’s returns cannot be evaluated with the firm’s ROA because their returns are rewards for
different risk classes. Do not use a diversified firm’s WACC as the cost of capital for a specific risk-class
project. Instead, the WACC of a “pure-play” publicly traded firm in the same risk-class as the project must be
used as the project’s cost of capital.
Estimating Risk-free rate in the CAPM – ROE in the WACC is calculated with empical estimates of CAPM
[Rf + βe(Rm-Rf)] variables extracted from efficient capital market data. In addition to βe, we need estimates of the
risk-free rate (Rf ) and the market portfolio rate of return (Rm). These rates of return are estimated from past
returns. For example, over the 104 year period from 1900-2004, the average return on treasury bills was 4%,
treasury bonds yielded 5.5%, and common stocks earned 11.1%. From these past returns, we could estimate the
market risk premium (Rm-Rf ) to be either 7.1% (11.1 – 4.0) if we use treasure bill returns (4%), or we could
estimate the market risk premium to be 5.6% (11.1 – 5.5) if we used treasury bond rates (5.5%).
For evaluating long-term projects (capital budgeting), a long-term estimate of CAPM is better than a short-term
estimate. Disagreements about how to make CAPM a long-term estimate focus on adjustments to Rf. Some argue
that the current short-term treasury bill rate is best, others argue that the current long-term treasury bond rate is
best. Neither is exactly theoretically correct, because the equity risk premium should capture the extra return of
the market for investing long-term (extra time length) and for systematic volatility.
In practice, Rf is adjusted by using the current treasury bond rate. If this practice is followed then the market risk
premium (Rm-Rf ) should be lower, 5.6% not 7.1%, based on 104 years of returns from 1900 – 2004. This
adjustment lowers the slope of the SML and makes the CAPM a better match with historical evidence. Many
studies have shown that CAPM estimates based on treasury bill rates overstates stock returns relative to the
market.
An alternative adjustment is to subtract the long-run liquidity premium of 1.5% (historical treasury bond yield of
5.5% minus the historical treasury bill yield of 4 %) from the current treasury bond yield. This adjustment makes
Rf an estimated annualized short-term Rf return that is expected to be earned on average over a long-term period.
With this adjustment, the market risk premium should be 7.1%, not 5.6%. The slope of the SML steeper, which is
more theoretically correct; however, it is less consistent with historical evidence that shows the CAPM overstates
stock returns relative to the market.
Taxes - Stock Betas are estimated from empirical stock return data (i.e. dividends and capital gains). These
returns accrue to shareholders from the firm’s after-tax earnings. As a result, empirically estimated stock betas in
the CAPM formula generate after-corporate-tax ROEs. This after-tax ROE cannot be averaged with a before-tax
ROD in the WACC calculation. Such averaging would cause the WACC to be some nonsensical mixture of
before-tax and after-tax returns. ROD is easily adjusted for corporate taxes. Because the firm’s interest expense is
tax deductible, income that would otherwise be taxed is “sheltered” from taxation by interest expense generated by
the firm’s ROD. The firm must still pay the interest expense, but the expense if effectively lower by the taxes that
are saved. The net “after-tax” cost of ROD is reduced to ROD(1-Tc). The WACC is then an after-tax return and is
calculated as:
Implied tax benefits of debt - Because ROD is adjusted for taxes, i.e. ROD (1-Tc) is used in the WACC
calculation, many people interpret this adjustment to mean that debt is beneficial because interest is tax deductible.
By extension, this implication suggests that debt financing creates value as compared to equity financing.
Remember that this adjustment in the WACC calculations simply equates ROD to ROE which is also an after-tax
return. Therefore this tax adjustment does not imply that debt financing has tax advantages over equity. This
implication will be investigated in greater detail in our study of Capital Structure Policy.
Exclude interest expense in NPV analysis when project is debt financed – From the separation theorem, we
know that how a project is financed is an independent and separate decision from the investment decision (i.e.
whether the project is acceptable). Using the WACC as the discount rate effectively “undoes” the impact of any
debt financing and generates a cost of capital for an all-equity financed project. This is consistent with the
separation theorem and correctly values the project independent of the financing decision. Interest expense should
be excluded from the estimated project cash flows.
Instability of Company Betas in the CAPM – Company betas can vary considerably over time. However,
portfolio betas are more stable than individual company betas. Therefore, when estimating the cost of capital for a
project it is preferable (i.e. the confidence interval of the estimate is tighter) if industry betas of “pure play”
companies are used in the CAPM rather than individual company betas.
CAPM is a single factor model – The CAPM implies that stock returns are only a function of the market risk
premium (Rm – Rf). Research has demonstrated that at times this relationship is weak. As research continues, we
may discover other variables are useful in explaining stock returns. For example, the Fama-French three-factor
model, theorizes that stock returns are also driven by firm size (Rs – RL) and undervalued status measured by
book-to-market value (RH – RL). Unfortunately, in practice, it is difficult to estimate these factors because
reporting agencies such Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s do not report values for these factors in their stock
reports.
Chapter 9
Handout Problem #1
Amalgamated has three operating divisions: chemical (40 % of assets), food (10% of assets), and electronics
(50% of assets). Below are industry averages of companies operating in these areas:
Amalgamated's Debt/Asset ratio is .6. Treasury Bills currently yield 1% and treasury bonds are currently yield
3.5%. Research from 1900 to 2004 indicates the market liquidity premium is 1.5%, the market risk premium over
treasury bills is 7% and over treasury bonds is 5.5%. The corporate tax rate is currently 35%.
1. What Rf and market risk premium could be used in the CAPM and what justification is used for each?
2. Calculate the appropriate discount rate to use in capital budgeting decisions for each of Amalgamated's
divisions?
Why is the cost of capital for Chemicals lower than its ROD?
Does the cost of capital calculation use a before-tax or after-tax βe? Why?
Does the cost of capital calculation use a before-tax or after-tax ROE? Why?
Does the cost of capital calculation use a before-tax or after-tax ROD? Why?
3. Suppose a 10-year proposed Food project is expected to generate net after-tax income of $ 5 million per
year. Its proposed cost is $30 million and annual expenses include $ 1 million of depreciation. The project can
be financed with all equity or with 40% debt at an interest rate of 7%.
Assuming the project’s NPV is zero, what is the project’s E(ROE) if Amalgamated finances it with all equity?
Assuming the project’s NPV is zero, what is the project’s E(ROE) if Amalgamated finances it with 40% debt?
What is the NPV of the project if financed with debt and equity?
A pure-play company with PP&E in the same risk-class as the market is considering a 50%
expansion in its existing asset base. The executive committee wants to know if a stock issuance is an
acceptable source of financing for the expansion. The firm is currently financed with 60% debt, yielding
5%, and 40% stock with a required return of 22.5%. The capital budgeting department projects the
expansion will earn 20%. The risk-free rate is 4%, and the expected return on the market is 12%.
Should the company issue stock to finance the expansion? Assume the corporate tax rate is zero.
Prove that the required return on the stock is 22.5% and then determine the impact of expansion on the
stock’s required return.
CHAPTER 11
Efficient Markets and Behavioral Finance
Quiz Questions
4. True or False?
a. Financing decisions are less easily reversed than investment decisions.
.
c. The semi-strong form of the efficient-market hypothesis states that prices reflect all
publicly available information.
d. In efficient markets the expected return on each stock is the same.
6. True or False?
a. Analysis by security analysts and investors helps keep markets efficient.
b. Psychologists have found that, once people have suffered a loss, they are
more relaxed about the possibility of incurring further losses.
c. Psychologists have observed that people tend to regard recent events as
representative of what might happen in the future.
d. If the efficient –market hypothesis is correct, managers will not be able to
increase stock prices by creative accounting that boosts reported earnings.
7. Geothermal Corporation has just received good news: its earnings increased by 20% from last year’s value.
Most investors are anticipating an increase of 25%. Will Geothermal’s stock price increase or decrease
when the announcement is made?
8. Here again are the six lessons of market efficiency. For each lesson give an example showing the lesson’s
relevance to financial managers.
a. Markets have no memory.
b. Trust market prices.
c. Read the entrails
d. There are no financial illusions.
e. The do-it-yourself alternative.
f. Seen one stock, seen them all.
Intermediate
12. Which of the following observations appear to indicate market inefficiency? Explain whether the observation
appears to contradict the weak, semi-strong, or strong from of the efficient-market hypothesis.
a. Tax-exempt municipal bonds offer lower pretax returns than taxable
government bonds.
b. Managers make superior returns on their purchases of their company’s stock.
c. There is a positive relationship between the return on the market in one
quarter and the change in aggregate profits in the next quarter.
d. There is disputed evidence that stocks that have appreciated unusually in the
recent past continue to do so in the future.
e. The stock of an acquired firm tends to appreciate in the period before the
merger announcement.
f. Stocks of companies with unexpectedly high earnings appear to offer high
returns for several months after the earnings announcement.
g. Very risky stocks on average give higher returns than safe stocks.
14. “If the efficient-market hypothesis is true, the pension fund manager might as well
select a portfolio with a pin.” Explain why this is not so.
16. What does the efficient-market hypothesis have to say about these two statements?
a. “I notice that short-term interest rates are about 1% below long-term rates. We
should borrow short-term.”
b. “I notice that interest rates in Japan are lower than rates in the United States.
We would do better to borrow Japanese yen rather than U.S. dollars.”
21. Many commentators have blamed the subprime crisis on “irrational exuberance”. What is your view?
Expalin briefly.
CHAPTER 12
Payout Policy
Basic
2. Here are several “facts” about typical corporate dividend policies. Which are true and which false?
a. Companies decide each year’s dividend by looking at their capital expenditure requirements and then
distributing whatever cash is left over.
b. Managers and investors seem more concerned with dividend changes than with dividend levels.
c. Managers often increase dividends temporarily when earnings are unexpectedly high for a year or two.
d. Companies undertaking substantial share repurchases usually finance them with an offsetting
reduction in cash dividends.
Intermediate
9. Which types of companies would you expect to distribute a relatively high or low proportion of current
earnings? Which would you expect to have a relatively high or low price-earnings ratio?
a. High-risk companies
b. Companies that have experienced an unexpected decline in profits.
c. Companies that expect to experience a decline in profits.
d. Growth companies with valuable future investment opportunities.
14. “Many companies use stock repurchases to increase earnings per share. For example, suppose that a
company is in the following position:
The company now repurchases 200,000 shares at $200 a share. The number of shares declines to
800,000 shares and earnings per share increase to $12.50. Assuming the price-earnings ratio stays at 20,
the share price must rise to $250.” Discuss.
16. An article on stock repurchase in the Los Angeles Times noted: “An increasing number of companies are
finding that the best investment they can make these days is in themselves.” Discuss this view. How is the
desirability of repurchase affected by company prospects and the price of its stock?
23. Consider the following two statements: “Dividend policy is irrelevant,” and “Stock price is the present value
of expected future dividends.” (See Chapter 5.) They sound contradictory. This question is designed to
show that they are fully consistent.
The current price of the shares of Charles River Mining Corporation is $50. Next year’s earnings and
dividends per share are $4 and $2, respectively. Investors expect perpetual growth at 8% per year. The
expected rate of return demanded by investors is r = 12%.
We can use the perpetual-growth model to calculate stock price:
DIV 2
P0 = = = 50
r-g .12 - .08
Suppose that Charles River Mining announces that it will switch to a 100% payout policy, issuing shares
as necessary to finance growth. Use the perpetual-growth model to show that current stock price is
unchanged.
CHAPTER 13
Does Debt Policy Matter without Taxes?
Problems
2. Spam Corp. is financed entirely by 100,000 shares of common stock that has a beta of 1.0. The
firm is expected to generate a level, perpetual stream of earnings and dividends. The stock has a
price-earnings ratio of 8 and a cost of equity of 12.5%. The company’s stock is selling for $50.
Now the firm decides to repurchase half of its shares and substitute an equal value of debt. The
debt is risk-free, with a 5% interest rate. The company is exempt from corporate income taxes.
Assuming MM are correct, calculate the following items before and after the debt issuance and
explain why the following financial variables increased or decreased.
a. E(ROA)
b. NOI
c. The risk of equity
d. The cost of equity
e. NI
f. Shares outstanding
g. EPS
h. Dividends Policy
i. Dividends
j. The firm’s overall cost of capital
k. The stock’s price
l. The P/E ratio
Does it seem appropriate to assume the company’s debt is risk-free when it repurchased half of
its stock with a debt issuance? How would the above items change if the debt increased
(decreased) in risk?
5. True or false?
a. MM’s financing proposition says that corporate borrowing increases earnings per share but
reduces the price-earnings ratio.
b. MM’s financing proposition says that the cost of equity increases with borrowing and that the
increase is a function of the D/E ratio of the firm.
c. MM’s financing proposition assumes that increased borrowing does not affect the interest rate
on the firm’s debt.
d. Borrowing does not increase financial risk and the cost of equity if there is no risk of
bankruptcy.
e. Borrowing increases firm value if there is a clientele of investors with a reason to prefer debt.
9. Optional :
Companies A and B differ only in their capital structure. A is financed 30% debt and 70% equity;
B is financed 10% debt and 90% equity. The debt of both companies is risk-free.
Assume E(ROA) is 10% and E(ROD) is 5%. Hint, let assets equal $1000.
a. Rosencrantz owns 10% of the common stock of A. What other investment package would
produce identical cash flows for Rosencrantz?
b. Guildenstern owns 20% of the common stock of B. What other investment package would
produce identical cash flows for Guildenstern?
c. Show that neither Rosencrantz nor Guildenstern would invest in the common stock of B if the
total value of company A were 10% less than that of B.
10. Here is a limerick: aka You Can’t Take Your Cows to Wall Street
What is the analogy between Mr. Carruthers’s cows and firms’ financing decisions? What would
MM’s proposition 1, suitable adapted, say about the value of Mr. Carruthers’s cows? Explain.
See How Corporate Finance Got Smart (1998)
a. “As the firm borrows more and debt becomes more risky, both stockholders and bondholders
demand higher rates of return. Thus by reducing the debt ratio we can reduce both the cost of
debt and the cost of equity, making everybody better off.”
b. “Moderate borrowing doesn’t significantly affect the probability of financial distress or
bankruptcy. Consequently moderate borrowing won’t increase the expected rate of return
demanded by stockholders.”
16. Each of the following statements is false or at least misleading. Exaplin why in each case.
a. “A Capital investment opportunity offering a 10% DCF rate of return is an attractive project if it
can be 100% debt-financed at an 8% interest rate.”
b. “The more debt the firm issues, the higher the interest rate it must pay. That is one important
reason why firms should operate at conservative debt level.”
19. Archimedes Levers is financed by a mixture of debt and equity. You have the following
information about its cost of capital. Can you fill in the blanks?
24. People often convey the idea behind MM’s proposition 1 by various supermarket analogies, for
example, “The value of a pie should not depend on how it is sliced,” or, “The cost of whole
chicken should be equal the cost of assembling one by buying two drumsticks, two wings, two
breats, and so on.”
Actually proposition 1 doesn’t work in the supermarket. You’ll pay less for an uncut whole pie
than for a pie assembled from pieces purchased separately. Supermarkets charge more for
chickens after they cut up. Why? What costs or imperfections cause proposition 1 to fail in the
supermarket? Are these costs or imperfections likely to be important for the corporations issuing
securities on the U.S or world capital markets? Expalin.
Chapter 14
Debt with Taxes
Handout Problem
Where Have All the Gains to Leverage Gone?
Suppose the investing public consists of three investor groups with the following tax brackets:
These investors can invest in perpetual municipal bonds, perpetual corporate bonds, and common
stock.
The corporate tax rate is 50%. Aggregate interest payments on municipal bonds totals $30 million.
Aggregate NOI of all corporations totals $300 million.
Each investor group has the same amount of money to invest and their total net worth equals the value
of all securities. In other words, all the interest income from muni’s as well as all corporate NOI
mentioned above must flow through securities purchased by the three investor groups listed above.
The minimum required rate of return demanded by investors after taxes in this economy is 10%.
(1) Suppose all companies are initially financed by common stock. Company X decides to mimic the
local municipality and issue bonds to raise capital. The firm will allocate $1 million of its NOI to
interest payments on the bonds. Which group of investors will buy the bonds? What will be the
rate of interest? What will be the effect of the bond issuance on the value of Company X?
(2) What will other companies do after observing the financing actions taken by Company X?
Suppose interest payments in the economy now total $150 million. At this point Company Y
decides to follow the actions of Company X and issue bonds, also allocating $1 million of its NOI
to interest payments on the bonds. Which group of investors will buy the bonds? What will be
the rate of interest? What will be the effect of the bond issuance on the value of Company X?
(3) Suppose total interest payments in the economy somehow rise to $230 million. Company Z was
one of the last firms to issue debt, also allocating $1 million of its NOI to interest payments on the
bonds. Which group of investors bought the bonds? What rate of interest did Company Z have
to pay on the bonds? What was the effect of the bond issuance on the value of Company Z?
What will be the impact of this bond issuance on interest rates and the value of firms that issue
bonds in the future?
(4) Over time, suppose a few corporations have accumulated excess cash from operations and want
to purchase marketable securities to “park” their money. How will all the financing activity settle
up? That is, how much debt must be outstanding? What is the value of all companies? What is
the interest rate in the economy? What is the impact of leveraging for a company? Show that
when all the dust settles, an unlevered firm has no incentive to issue debt and a levered
company has no incentive to retire debt with common stock.
Chapter 14 Problems
1. The present value of interest tax shields is often written as TcD, where D is the amount of debt
and Tc is the marginal corporate tax rate. Under what assumptions is this present value correct?
3. What is the relative tax advantage of corporate debt if the corporate tax rate is T c= .35, the
personal tax rate is Tp= .35, but all equity income is received as capital gains and escapes tax
entirely (TpE= 0)? How does the relative tax rate advantage change if the company decides to pay
out all equity income as cash dividends that are taxed at 15%?
4. “The firm can’t use interest tax shields unless it has (taxable) income to shield.” What does this
statement imply for debt policy? Explain briefly.
5. Miller’s tax adjustment model indicates that managers of non-profit hospitals should issue bonds
at what rate?
6. In 2010, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blasted the president’s budget deficit commission on its
suggestion to eliminate the mortgage interest tax break, saying it would force middle-class
homeowners to subsidize tax breaks for the wealthy. Apply Miller’s tax model and discuss.
See also: A Defense of the Mortgage Interest Deduction (1992)
a. What are the costs of going bankrupt? Define these costs carefully.
b. “ A company can incur costs of financial distress without going bankrupt.” Expain how this can
happen
c. Expalin how conflicts of interests between bondholders and stockholders can lead to financial
distress.
Intermediate
18.. Let us go back to circular File’s market-value blance sheet
19. The Salad Oil Storage(SOS) company has financed a large part of its facilties with long-term
debt. There is a significant risk of default, but the company is not on the ropes yet. Explain:
a. Why SOS stockholders could lose by investing in a positive-NPV project financed by an equity
issue.
b. Why SOS stockholders could gain by investing in a negative-NPV project financed by cash.
c. Why SOS stockholders could gain from paying out a large cash dividend.
20 . a. Who benefits from the fine print in the bond contracts when the firm gets into financial trouble?
Give a one-sentence answer
c. Who benefits from the fine print when the bonds are issued?
21. Summarizing – What have we learned in finance? If stock price is driven by EPS then discuss
whether management can increase EPS (and thus dividends and stock price) by:
A 100% equity financed firm is considering a strategic 50% expansion of its core business... The firm is
a “pure play” and the expansion will be in the same core business (i.e. same risk class). If the project is
financed with bonds, the firm’s investment bankers project that the bonds will float at a yield of 6%.
Currently, before expansion, the firm’s stock has a beta (βe) of 2. The risk-free rate is currently 5%. The
expected return on the market is 12%. The firm’s tax bracket is 50%. Management's fundamental
strategic question is whether financing with cheap debt (6% bonds) versus expensive equity
(stock) will create value for the shareholders.
The CFO assigns you the task of assembling a team and preparing an analysis of the proposed
expansion with debt financing. You are specifically instructed to address the impact on the firm’s EPS,
dividends, and stock price. You are instructed to reconcile your answer with results from NPV analysis
based on the firm’s ATWACC.